NEW YORK - Fans outside New York's Beacon Theater were cheering for Taylor Swift before she arrived, belting her songs before she stepped onstage.
“I always thought that it was something that other people did,” Swift said of directing. Being on sets and making music videos, “the lists of things I was absorbing became so long that eventually, I thought, I really want to do this.” That tension was something she wanted people to feel while watching the couple at the center of the film. “I wanted it to feel like their falling together was inevitable and their falling apart was just as inevitable,” Swift said. “They couldn't stop from colliding, and they couldn't stop from being dismantled.”
“There wasn't a set script or movement that you had to stick to, so there was just so much freedom, and I think that's how we got such real moments,” Sink said.
Talking without a mask on is the same as playing Russian roulette, and if my programming has taught me anything it's that Russia is bad!